Posts Tagged ‘Freddie Mac’

Why’d It Have To Be Loans?

Thursday, July 1st, 2010

Fannie and Freddie don’t like the new energy efficient loan programs being put into place by state and local governments around the country.

Why? Because they regard these loans as subordinate to the Fannie/Freddie loans held on the houses in question:

“The purpose of this industry letter is to remind seller/servicers that an energy-related lien may not be senior to any mortgage delivered to Freddie Mac,” wrote Patricia J. McClung, a Freddie Mac executive.

So, no more loans beyond the loans the taxpayers are already losing money on!

And this is yet another example of why energy efficiency schemes make no sense unless they’re economically competitive.

Re-fitting a house for solar may be a wonderful idea in the long run, but in the short run it’s far too expensive and must be subsidized.

It’s difficult to understand why piling on more debt in aid of alternative energy is a rational approach in a nation where 1 in 4 borrowers is already underwater.

Better courses of action, namely raising the tax on fossil fuels to a point where alternative energy schemes are viable, funding energy programs directly, and allowing bankruptcy courts to reduce principal on underwater mortgages, have absolutely no chance of getting passed by this or any other Congress.

So, it’s extend and pretend, from housing to the green economy…

Gorilla says: “Fannie and Freddie understand red, thus they’re not quite ready to go green!”

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Quote Of The Day

Friday, March 5th, 2010

From Representative Barney Frank, a master of double-talk who’s not doing much more than looking the other way when it comes to financial industry reform, with regard to the future prospects of repayment for Fannie and Freddie investors:

“We may now decide to bail you out. . . . But that’s different from being legally obligated.”

Gorilla says: “A distinction without a difference is like a checking account without a toaster!”

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